Sentences with phrase «bigger file cabinet»

We have a big filing cabinet for the «business» stuff like taxes and other documents, but now I have a folder for each of my projects that I can get to really quickly in a fairly attractive box that I don't mind sitting out in our sunroom (where my desk is).
Matthew Moeller: Well, I think the big thing was just trying to move away from the bundles and bundles of paper and I'm not saying that you should be a 100 % paperless, I mean, it's still today I often print things out to look at I have smaller books that maybe do not have material that's easy to navigate online on a bookshelf that I can just grab, but the days of the big file cabinets in the back of the office and the unlimited number of redwells falling out everywhere, that was something when I went out on my own that I certainly envisioned was not going to be a part of kind of how we do things, and I think in moving away from that you're able to better control your operating costs, you're able to keep overhead to a lower level, and ultimately, I think you're able to deliver more value to the client and running a much more streamlined process.

Not exact matches

Nancie's books for Heinemann include Systems to Transform Your Classroom and School, which takes teachers inside her award - winning school to learn about the innovations that make the biggest impact on achievement and community; Lessons That Change Writers, a year's worth of instruction straight from Nancie's file cabinets; and Naming the World: A Year of Poems and Lessons, which helps teachers to jumpstart their teaching of writing and literature each day by unpacking a poem with their students.
The technology scolds notwithstanding, we've long left the days when one of the biggest risks to client confidentiality was leaving the file cabinet unlocked or leaving behind a deal sheet on a photocopier.
* Adequate hardware (including at least one good mouse or trackball) * High voltage surge protector * Top tier residential Internet access at minimum * Big table or desk: at the bare minimum, a 72in utility table, the more space the better * Good chair * Good light: lamps, adequate space near a window * Ventilation and climate control: this probably means a window AC unit if you have a lot of hardware * Printer, for a lot of folks * Modicum of supplies: notebooks, multipurpose paper, Post-Its, envelopes, folders, pens, pencils, spare cables (power, USB, Firewire, Ethernet), cleaning supplies (for keeping workspaces and displays free of dust and other crud) * Storage space, closet or cabinet: the space occupied by supplies, cables, crates, and files starts to add up PDQ * Good WiFi router or repeater (i.e., not a Linksys WRT series) * Hardcopy address book (at bare minimum, sync your contacts on multiple devices)
Whether big or small, organizations should consider the risk they are managing when they are in possession of PII, often occurs in large amounts and unsecured in filing cabinets or even boxes under someone's desk!
Sit comfortabl... y for less on ergonomically - designed office chairs featuring height / position adjustment mechanisms, and file in style with cabinets, storage cupboards and large and small desks with or without drawers, suiting modern home offices however big or small.
And I have put file folders and something similar to your box on my list of items to buy when we come home this summer for vacation - we didn't bring our big desk and filing cabinet with us and the desk the embassy has provided us with doesn't quite meet our organizational needs.
From tiny nooks just big enough for a desk to open spaces filled with books, art supplies and filing cabinets, these home offices are so pleasant to work in, you'll forget about all the tasks on your to - do list.
I have a big binder located in my filing cabinet that has all the important house related manuals.
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